Gammasphere on a roll
ARGONNE, Ill. (Sept. 28, 2004) — Gammasphere, the
world's most sensitive gamma-ray detector, is already a seasoned traveler,
having crossed the United States from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
to Argonne by truck, but the 20-ton instrument has recently gone truly mobile
and can now be moved around the experiment hall in Argonne-East's Building
203 to meet the needs of physicists.
What is Gammasphere?
Gammasphere is the world’s most powerful spectrometer for nuclear structure
research and is especially good at collecting gamma ray data following the
fusion of heavy ions.
Gammasphere was built by a consortium of scientists from national laboratories
and many universities. The project was coordinated by scientists at Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, where the device was first assembled. It consists of 110
high-purity germanium detectors, each about the size of a coffee cup, in a spherical
arrangement.
Beams of ions from the Argonne Tandem Linac Accelerator System, or ATLAS, are
directed at targets (usually a thin metal film). Nuclei from the beam fuse with
those in the target, producing highly excited, much heavier nuclei. Gammasphere
detects gamma rays — high-energy light particles — emitted from the excited nuclei
as they spin and cool.
Gammasphere first moved from Lawrence Berkeley to Argonne in the fall of 1997
and returned to Argonne again in 2003. At Argonne, Gammapshere research has centered
on stydying nuclei far from stability.
|
Previously, Gammasphere was rooted to a spot between an instrument called
the Fragment Mass Analyzer (FMA) and a beamline from ATLAS, the Argonne
Tandem Linac Accelerator System. Now, with a couple of days' work, Gammasphere can
be moved about 20 feet across the floor to a different beamline.
"The ability to move Gammasphere gives the user community a substantial
amount of flexibility,” said Kim Lister, who leads the Low
Energy Research Group in Argonne's Physics
Division. “Gammasphere can be an
impediment to some kinds of experiments that require the FMA, and vice-versa.”
“The things we're looking for with the FMA are so exotic, they may be produced
only once every couple of hours,” Lister said. “And you can't just crank up
the beam intensity to make more as that would probably damage the sensitive
Gammasphere detectors.”
Moving Gammasphere away from the FMA also allows experimenters to use new
kinds of auxilliary detectors in conjunction with the device, or make existing
instruments easier to use. For example, Gammasphere was recently used in combination
with the Compact Heavy Ion Counter, or CHICO. Designed and built by researchers
at the University of Rochester's Nuclear Structure Research Laboratory specifically
for use with Gammasphere, CHICO sat in the center of Gammasphere to measure
the mass and scattering angles of heavy ions while Gammasphere sought out the
gamma rays they emitted. In Gammasphere's previous position, wedged between
a concrete wall and the FMA, the skills of a contortionist were required to
install and adjust CHICO. In the new location, CHICO was accessible from almost
any angle.
Mechanical engineer Bruce Zabransky and chief technician John Rohrer, both
of Argonne's Physics Division, conducted much of the planning and preparation
for Gammasphere's first trek across the experiment hall. Planning for the first
move included building an exact scale model of the experiment hall floor and
the obstacles Gammasphere had to avoid. A forest of data cables and liquid-nitrogen
lines had to be disconnected, and without these lifelines, the relocation team
had only a few hours to move Gammas phere. If the germanium crystals are allowed
to warm above a certain point, Gammasphere loses a significant level of its
energy resolution and selectivity for rare events.
“The only remedy is to anneal the detectors, which involves taking them all
out and baking them in our annealing factory,” Lister said. “The whole process
would take about three months.” Rolling on heavy-duty industrial casters across
a steel-plate “dance floor” that provided a smooth rolling surface, Gammasphere
made its way 20 feet to a new location in front of the old APEX beamline. The
move required about eight hours and a crew of 20 to complete.
Lister said Gammasphere will probably move back and forth across the experiment
hall once a year or so. The scheduling will depend on the needs of the user
community.
Gammasphere will be a major asset for research with the proposed Rare Isotope
Accelerator (RIA) in the future, where its efficiency and high resolution will
have great importance.
RIA will enable broad-based physics research with intense, high-quality energetic
beams of short-lived isotopes of all chemical elements from the very lightest
to the very heaviest. The isotopes will be available over a range of energies,
from thousands of electron volts per particle for radioactive decay studies
and trapping, through millions of electron volts (MeV) for astrophysics, to
tens of MeV for reactions studies and hundreds of MeV for fast fragment physics.
Gammasphere is optimised for the lower energy studies, where it will remain
an important tool.
Gammasphere's unique sensitivity will enhance research in several of RIA's
target areas, Lister said, so it's likely to move from beamline to beamline
once or twice a year at RIA just as it now does at ATLAS. — Dave
Jacqué
Argonne National Laboratory brings
the world's brightest scientists and engineers together to find exciting and
creative new solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology.
The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne conducts leading-edge basic
and applied scientific research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne
researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities,
and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific
problems, advance America 's scientific leadership and prepare the nation for
a better future. With employees from more than 60 nations, Argonne is managed
by UChicago
Argonne, LLC for
the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please contact Dave Jacqué (630/252-5582
or info@anl.gov) at Argonne.
|